Each week this season we'll tap into the minds of some of college football's best players from over the years in our weekly Exit Poll. This week, Sporting News asks: Are you buying or selling Baylor? How do you handle a potential QB dilemma at Ohio State?

1. Are you buying or selling the Baylor Bears?

Jake Plummer: I'm buying the Baylor Bears, at least I hope so. It's fun to see a new team making waves and it will be interesting to see how they fare as their Big 12 schedule gets progressively harder each week, especially in November. Beat the big boys in November and Seastrunk will jolt to the top of the Heisman race.

Jared Zabransky: They greatly resemble the Oregon offense with a speedy RB and a dynamic QB, high-paced offense and point tallies off the charts. But unlike Oregon, they haven't played quality opponents yet. I just can't quite make the investment in this team yet although they are extremely fun to watch and I believe have a great shot at winning the Big 12.

Butch Woolfolk: I'm Buying Baylor. Regardless of the competition, scoring reflects efficiencies in the game where there is an excellence in throwing, catching, blocking and running, not to mention clever scheming by the offensive coordinator. Those factors will make the NCAA elite teams scramble to find an answer to stop.

Anthony McFarland: The Baylor Bears may be putting up big numbers and Seastrunk is the real deal. However, in the landscape of college football, I don't think they are any better than the 15th best team in the country. The Big 12 may be won by Texas. Enough said.

2. You're Urban Meyer. Your next game is against Wisconsin at home, then you're at Northwestern. When Braxton Miller is healthy - he's been cleared to play Saturday -- what would you do: Play Miller or stick with Kenny Guiton?

McFarland: Braxton Miller is the Heisman Trophy candidate -- end of story. When Braxton is 100 percent healthy, I play him and don't think twice about it. Besides, look at the competition Guiton has faced -- not the toughest.

Woolfolk: I believe in the old standard that a player does not lose his position because of injury. Play Braxton Miller when he is healthy. Kenny Guiton has proven that he will always be ready.

Plummer: Tough call here. Kenny Guiton has been playing like a he's the Heisman candidate yet no one is mentioning this because Braxton Miller is supposed to be that guy. Whatever decision Meyer makes should have no effect on this team. They are well rounded on defense and offense. I tip my hat to Kenny Guiton for playing some superb ball, albeit against some weaker teams, knowing full well his time is limited.

Zabransky: Since Guiton has been playing as well as he is, I would not be in a big rush to get Miller back on the field. I would make sure he is 100 percent, has a great couple weeks of practice,and then replace Guiton. Miller led the team to an undefeated record last year and hasn't lost yet. I don't believe in, "playing the hot hand." There is a reason why Miller was the starter at the beginning of the year.

3. Which team is most susceptible to a loss next weekend: No. 1 Alabama at home vs. Ole Miss, No. 4 Ohio State at home vs. No. 24 Wisconsin or No. 5 Stanford at Washington State?

Zabransky: This is a coin flip. So I'm going to go to the third side of this coin -- out on a limb -- and say Washington State. If their opportunistic defense can continue to get turnovers and their offense can take care of the ball I believe the Cougars have a chance to steal this game.

Woolfolk: Wisconsin has always given Ohio State trouble and, I suspect, will do again.

McFarland: Stanford on the road. Anytime you're trying to pick an upset, look at the home team and couple that with the fact Stanford isn't a high-flying team. They are more of a grind-it-out team and that tends to bog down sometime.

Plummer: I think Ohio State will have its hands full versus Wisconsin. I really like Badger running back Melvin Gordon, and Wisconsin is playing with a chip on its shoulder after giving away the game in Tempe two weeks ago.

Woolfolk: I'm disappointed at the lack of respect Oregon is getting from the rest of the country. It seems that sports writers and coaches alike are so sold on Alabama as the best team in the country. Oregon has got something special this year.

McFarland: Former Notre Dame QB Everett Golson. The fact that he took his team to a 12-0 record last year but didn't have the mental toughness to take care of his classes in the spring and hurt his football team this fall.

Plummer: I am disappointed in the overhyped buildup of every big game being the "Game of the Century" or an "Epic Battle of the Giants" and then the game is a dud. Can we just let the game take its own course without building it up for seven days prior to kickoff?

Zabransky: Dan Hawkins' CFL tenure. Apparently five games were enough for the Montreal front office to see of Hawk. I was wishing the best for the former BSU head coach.

Our Exit Poll panelists:

Anthony "Booger" McFarland
McFarland was a first-team SEC and All-American noseguard in 1998 for the Tigers. The 15th overall pick out of LSU in 1999, McFarland won a Super Bowl with the Buccaneers and Colts. He hosts an afternoon sports talk show from 3-7 ET on 98.7 The Fan in Tampa and also is a host on Sirius XM NFL Radio. Follow him at @lsubooger.

Jake Plummer
Arizona State's third all-time leading passer with 8,626 yards and 65 TDs, Plummer was the Pac-10 Offensive Player of the Year in 1996. He went on to a 10-year NFL career and reached the Pro Bowl in 2005 with Denver. You can find him working in studio for the Pac-12 Network when he's not offering one-on-one QB instruction to college and high school players or spending time with his wife and two sons.

Butch Woolfolk
Woolfolk led Michigan in rushing in 1979, '80 and '81. He's sixth on the Wolverines all-time list with 3,850 rushing yards and scored 29 times. He was the 1981 Rose Bowl MVP. He also was a multiple Big Ten champion in track and field and still holds the outdoor 200-meter record at Michigan (20.59 seconds) and is fourth in the 100 (10.36). A first-round NFL pick in 1982, he played seven seasons in the NFL and is now semi-retired.

Jared Zabransky
Boise State's second all-time leading passer with 8,256 yards and 58 TD passes, Zabransky was right in the middle of Sporting News' No. 2 play on our list of Defining BCS Moments. In the 2007 Fiesta Bowl, Zabransky perfectly executed the Statue of Liberty play on a 2-point conversion in overtime for the Broncos' stunning victory over Oklahoma that gave non-BCS teams a new level of respect. He works for National Oilwell Varco and works with young quarterbacks on weekends in the Houston area.